From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Tue Mar 09 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!bcm.tmc.edu!news.msfc.nasa.gov!news.maxwell.syr.edu!howland.erols.net!news-out.digex.net.MISMATCH!dca1-hub1.news.digex.net!digex!dca1-nnrp1.news.digex.net.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: zbfyge@capitalinks.com
Newsgroups: bionet.population-bio
Subject: FREE Horoscope - NOT ANY SPAM!  5285
Lines: 3
Message-ID: <D4nF2.2832$Py.105250904@dca1-nnrp1.news.digex.net>
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 05:05:39 GMT
NNTP-Posting-Host: 207.111.39.7
X-Complaints-To: abuse@digex.net
X-Trace: dca1-nnrp1.news.digex.net 921042339 207.111.39.7 (Wed, 10 Mar 1999 00:05:39 EDT)
NNTP-Posting-Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 00:05:39 EDT
Organization: DIGEX, Inc. - Beltsville, MD - http://www.digex.net

Daily horoscopes free of chearge - just thought you might like to know..  http://www.capitalinks.com and press the DAILY HOROSCOPE BUTTON - not much else to say - this is really the only freebie horoscope on the net that I know of
xbkeqgbrxcuypvgrqptzolsxmwewcretxydwcirlxljfgwgjnxusnchyejykohcvjrnsjdhmfishqxlsspbgkf


From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Wed Mar 10 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!internet!biosci!not-for-mail
From: biohelp (BIOSCI Administrator)
Newsgroups: bionet.population-bio
Subject: BIOSCI/bionet miniFAQ & Fundraiser
Date: 11 Mar 1999 02:00:15 -0800
Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Molecular Biology
Lines: 233
Sender: daemon@net.bio.net
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <199903111000.CAA00383@net.bio.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net.bio.net

(LAST REVISION: 30-JUL-95)

This BIOSCI "miniFAQ" is designed to answer the questions that come up
the *most frequently*.  The main BIOSCI FAQ (Frequently Asked
Questions) is accessible on the World Wide Web at URL
http://www.bio.net/.

If you can not find an answer to your question in this or other
documentation, the BIOSCI technical support staff answers e-mail
queries sent to

		       biosci-help@net.bio.net

We can only answer questions about the use of the newsgroups and
mailing lists.  We unfortunately do not have the staff to do Internet
information searches or answer scientific questions.  Please post
those to the appropriate BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups.


	Contents:
	--------
	0) BIOSCI NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT!!

	1) Using the WWW to access the BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups.

	2) What to do about "spams," i.e., junk mail, ads, etc.

	3) Examples of subscribing and unsubscribing to the mailing lists.

	4) The BIOSCI user address and research interest directory.


0) BIOSCI NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT!!
------------------------------
BIOSCI's government funding has been expended, and we are now
operating solely from advertising revenue that we have raised from our
Web site at http://www.bio.net/.  We need just a few minutes of your
time to help us serve you.

You can do two important things which will take very little time for
you individually and will immensely help us continue to help you.

First, please use our WWW system at http://www.bio.net/ to access the
archives.  You can post or reply to messages via your Web browser as
described in item #1 below.  Your usage helps attract sponsors. If you
contact any of our sponsors, please be sure to thank them for
supporting BIOSCI. It is critical for them to get this feedback if
they are to continue their sponsorship for the long term.

Second, if you work for a company or organization that provides
products or services of interest to the biology community, please pass
this message on to your marketing or marketing communications
department or other appropriate group.  Please ask them to help
support BIOSCI by sponsoring our Web site and explain the uses and
benefits of the system to the biology community. If they are
interested, they can then contact us for further information at our
tech support address, biosci-help@net.bio.net.


1) Using the WWW to access the BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups.
--------------------------------------------------------
As of 10 December 1995, all BIOSCI/bionet full newsgroups are
accessible through the World Wide Web (WWW) at URL http://www.bio.net.
One can read and reply publicly or privately to both recent postings
and archived messages through one's Web browser if it is configured
properly to send e-mail.  Each newsgroup is equipped with its own WAIS
index.  The main BIOSCI home page also has access to the BIO-JOURNALS
Table of Contents database WAIS index and the BIOSCI user address
database described in another item further below.


2) What to do about "spams," i.e., junk mail, ads, etc.
-------------------------------------------------------
BIOSCI is a set of parallel USENET newsgroups (the "bionet" groups),
mailing lists, and a hypermail archive at URL http://www.bio.net/.
The same postings are distributed on all media (except for a small
number of mailing-list-only groups at net.bio.net).  Unfortunately it
is becoming a despicable practice on the Internet (by a few people out
to make a fast buck) to do automated mass postings to thousands of
newsgroups and mailing lists.  These attempts to grab free advertising
are refered to as "spams" in the usual, somewhat boneheaded, net
terminology.  USENET is more susceptible to this practice, and many
spams originate on the USENET groups and then are passed on to the
mailing lists.  However, spammers also get lists of mailing addresses
and hit these too, so neither medium is immune.

What should you do personally if you get junk mail?
---------------------------------------------------
Just delete it and move on without reading it further.  Filing a
protest is becoming increasingly useless because spammers are often
disguising the addresses where the messages are sent from.  Unless you
really understand Internet mail systems, your attempt at protest by
sending replies to the message will often end up being sent to the
address of an innocent person that the spammer is victimizing.

What can BIOSCI/bionet do to protect its newsgroups?
----------------------------------------------------
The only solution currently available is to moderate the newsgroup.
If this newsgroup is already moderated, then you are in good shape.
Moderation protects the USENET distribution from about 95% of the
spams that are being sent to date and protects the mailing lists
completely.  Moderation means, however, that someone has to take the
time to review each message before it goes out.  We have set up
software here that simply allows the moderator to forward to an
address at net.bio.net messages that (s)he wishes to have distributed.
This takes no more time than that needed to read the message and pass
it on, say about 1 min. per message.

Most newsgroups currently have a discussion leader who is responsible
for their newsgroup.  The discussions leaders and their e-mail
addresses are listed in the BIOSCI Information Sheet which is
available on the Web at http://www.bio.net/.  If a newsgroup is being
hit with too many junk postings, please contact the discussion leader
for that group and see if there is interest in moderating the group.
Please do not assume that by simply posting a complaint to the
newsgroup itself, anyone on the BIOSCI staff will act on your
complaint.  With close to 100 newsgroups to run, the BIOSCI staff has
to rely on the discussion leaders of each newsgroup to report problems
directly to us at biosci-help@net.bio.net.

We will moderate any of our newsgroups if the discussion leader tells
us that the readership of the group wishes to do so and if a moderator
is willing to do the work.  For most BIOSCI/bionet groups, this
entails only a few minutes of work each day.

Moderating a newsgroup will resolve probably 95% of the junk postings
on the USENET distribution.  Unfortunately there are easy ways for
determined spammers to override the moderation mechanism on USENET,
but we can protect our e-mail subscribers from unwanted postings if
the newsgroup is moderated.  You can also access our newsgroups over
the WWW at URL http://www.bio.net.  While this Web interface will not
stop spammers from trying to post to the groups, this will give you
yet another way, besides using USENET news, to keep the junk out of
your personal mail files.  For those of you with local USENET news
systems, the Web interface will also give you faster access to new
newsgroups and recent postings.


3) Examples of subscribing and unsubscribing to the mailing lists.
------------------------------------------------------------------
PLEASE NOTE: The BIOSCI management does NOT act on
subscription/unsubscription requests that are posted improperly to the
newsgroups and mailing lists.  People who do this only bother everyone
on the lists to no avail.  Please be sure to follow the proper
procedures below.

Gory details are in the BIOSCI Information sheets on the Web at
http://www.bio.net.  Below we give an example utilizing the
METHODS-AND-REAGENTS list at both of our two BIOSCI sites:

Users in the Americas and Pacific Rim countries who use the BIOSCI
------------------------------------------------------------------
node at computer net.bio.net:
----------------------------

A) Determine the "listname" which is the <=8 character mail address
                                         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
   for the group.  These can be found in the BIOSCI Info. Sheet.  For
   the METHODS-AND-REAGENTS group the mailing address is
   methods@net.bio.net.  The listname is the portion of the address to
   the left of the @ sign, i.e., "methods".  The listname is used with
   the "subscribe" and "unsubscribe" commands illustrated below.

B) Mail all commands in the body of a mail message addressed to
   biosci-server@net.bio.net.  Do NOT send commands to the newsgroup
   posting addresses!  Leave the Subject: line blank, any text on it
   will be ignored.

C) In the body of your message put one or more of the following
   commands with an "end" command on the last line, e.g.,

   subscribe methods
   unsubscribe methods
   end

   Do NOT put your e-mail address or other text on these lines.  The
   server only allows you to cancel your subscription if the address
   on your mail header matches the address on our mailing list.
   Please ask for help at biosci-help@net.bio.net if your address has
   changed, e.g., if you know you are on the list but the server tells
   you that you are not a member.


Users in Europe, Africa, and Central Asia who use the BIOSCI node at
--------------------------------------------------------------------
computer daresbury.ac.uk (also known as dl.ac.uk):
-------------------------------------------------

To subscribe and unsubscribe to/from the BIOSCI lists, you need to
specify the full USENET newsgroup name with "bionet-news." prepended.
The USENET newsgroup names are listed in the BIOSCI Information sheet
on the Web at http://www.bio.net/.  For the METHODS-AND-REAGENTS list
the USENET newsgroup name is bionet.molbio.methds-reagnts, thus the
appropriate commands are

    sub bionet-news.bionet.molbio.methds-reagnts

    unsub bionet-news.bionet.molbio.methds-reagnts

These commands are included in a message addressed to mxt@dl.ac.uk,
NOT to the newsgroup mailing addresses.  As usual, include the text in
the body of the message as text on the Subject: line is ignored.

To unsubscribe from all the lists at the UK node, use

    unsub bionet-news

Please note that if the address in the list is different than the one
in your mail message header, you will not be able to unsubscribe by
this method. If you have problems, please mail biosci@daresbury.ac.uk.


4) The BIOSCI user address and research interest directory.
-----------------------------------------------------------
Please take this opportunity to add your name, address, and research
interest information to the BIOSCI User Address Database if you have
not already done so.

You can fill out the address form directly through our Web page at URL
http://www.bio.net/adrform.html.

The address database is reindexed nightly for WWW access (the URL is
http://www.bio.net/).  If you are not directly on the Internet but can
reach it by e-mail, please use our waismail server to access the user
directory.  waismail use is described above.  You can also request a
user address form by e-mail from biosci-help@net.bio.net.

Please check your database entry from time-to-time to see if your
address information is still up-to-date.  Because of our limited
personnel resources, we ask that you resubmit a *complete* form to
revise your entry; we only replace complete entries and do not have
resources to edit old forms.


From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Thu Mar 11 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!agrar.uni-giessen.de!Marcus.Hoffmann
From: Marcus.Hoffmann@agrar.uni-giessen.de (Marcus Hoffmann)
Newsgroups: bionet.population-bio
Subject: (none)
Date: 12 Mar 1999 01:51:06 -0800
Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Molecular Biology
Lines: 2
Sender: daemon@net.bio.net
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <Pine.A41.4.05.9903121045210.44706-100000@dali.hrz.uni-giessen.de>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net.bio.net

subscribe POPULATION-BIOLOGY


From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Mon Mar 15 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!CNS.BU.EDU!cas-cns
From: cas-cns@CNS.BU.EDU
Newsgroups: bionet.population-bio
Subject: (none)
Date: 15 Mar 1999 16:52:37 -0800
Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Molecular Biology
Lines: 605
Sender: daemon@net.bio.net
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <199903152104.QAA11022@cns.bu.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net.bio.net

***** CALL FOR REGISTRATION ***** 
               and          
*****   COMPLETE PROGRAM *****
Sender: cas-cns@cns.bu.edu
Precedence: bulk
Reply-To: cas-cns@cns.bu.edu


THIRD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COGNITIVE AND NEURAL SYSTEMS 

Tutorials: May 26, 1999
Meeting: May 27-29, 1999 

Boston University
677 Beacon Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02215
http://cns-web.bu.edu/meetings/

Sponsored by Boston University's
Center for Adaptive Systems
and 
Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems
with financial support from DARPA and ONR 


How Does the Brain Control Behavior?

How Can Technology Emulate Biological Intelligence? 

The conference will include invited tutorials and lectures, and
contributed lectures and posters by experts on the biology and
technology of how the brain and other intelligent systems adapt 
to a changing world. The conference is aimed at researchers and 
students of computational neuroscience, connectionist cognitive 
science, artificial neural networks, neuromorphic engineering, 
and artificial intelligence.

A single oral or poster session enables all presented work to be
highly visible.

Costs are kept at a minimum without compromising the quality of
meeting handouts and social events.

SEE BELOW FOR THE COMPLETE MEETING SCHEDULE (printed after the
registration form). 

SEE THE WEB SITE FOR HOTEL AND OTHER CONFERENCE INFORMATION. 


********************

REGISTRATION FORM 

Third International Conference on Cognitive and Neural Systems 

Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems
Boston University 
677 Beacon Street 
Boston, Massachusetts 02215 
Tutorials: May 26, 1999
Meeting: May 27-29, 1999 
FAX: (617) 353-7755 
http://cns-web.bu.edu/meetings/


(Please Type or Print) 

Mr/Ms/Dr/Prof: _____________________________________________________

Name: ______________________________________________________________

Affiliation: _______________________________________________________

Address: ___________________________________________________________

City, State, Postal Code: __________________________________________

Phone and Fax: _____________________________________________________

Email: _____________________________________________________________


The conference registration fee includes the meeting program,
reception, two coffee breaks each day, and meeting proceedings. 
The tutorial registration fee includes tutorial notes and two 
coffee breaks.


CHECK ONE:

(  )  $70 Conference plus Tutorial (Regular) 
(  )  $45 Conference plus Tutorial (Student)  
(  )  $45 Conference Only (Regular) 
(  )  $30 Conference Only (Student) 
(  )  $25 Tutorial Only (Regular) 
(  )  $15 Tutorial Only (Student) 


METHOD OF PAYMENT (please fax or mail):

[   ] Enclosed is a check made payable to "Boston University". 
      Checks must be made payable in US dollars and issued by 
      a US correspondent bank. Each registrant is responsible 
      for any and all bank charges.

[   ] I wish to pay my fees by credit card 
      (MasterCard, Visa, or Discover Card only).

Name as it appears on the card: _____________________________________

Type of card: _______________________________________________________

Account number: _____________________________________________________

Expiration date: ____________________________________________________

Signature: __________________________________________________________

********************


MEETING SCHEDULE

Wednesday, May 26, 1999 (Tutorials)

 7:45am---8:30am MEETING REGISTRATION
 8:30am--10:00am Stephen Grossberg:
		 "Development, learning, attention, and grouping
		  by the laminar circuits of visual cortex"
10:00am--10:30am COFFEE BREAK
10:30am--12:00pm Daniel Schacter:
		 "True memories, false memories:
		  A cognitive neuroscience perspective"
12:00pm---1:30pm LUNCH
 1:30pm---3:00pm Gail Carpenter:
		 "Adaptive resonance theory and practice"
 3:00pm---3:30pm COFFEE BREAK
 3:30pm---5:00pm Tomaso Poggio:
		 "Supervised learning: Regularization and
		  support vector machines"


Thursday, May 27, 1999 (Invited Talks, Contributed Talks, and Posters)
Session Chairs: Stephen Grossberg (AM) and Daniel Bullock (PM)

 7:15am---8:00am MEETING REGISTRATION
 7:55am---8:00am Stephen Grossberg:
		 "Welcome and Introduction" 
 8:00am---8:45am Joseph LeDoux:
		 "Learning about danger: Systems and synapses"
 8:45am---9:30am Joaquin Fuster:
		 "The frontal lobe in temporal aspects of cognition"
 9:30am--10:15am John Lisman:
		 "The role of theta-gamma oscillations in memory processes"
10:15am--10:45am COFFEE BREAK AND POSTER SESSION I 
10:45am--11:30am Michael Hasselmo:
		 "Neuromodulation and cortical memory function:
		  Physiology and computational modeling"
11:30am--12:15pm Dario Floreano:
		"Evolutionary cybernetics: Exploring the foundations
		 of adaptive intelligence in biomimetic robots"
12:15pm---1:00pm Paolo Gaudiano:
		 "Visually guided navigation with autonomous mobile robots" 
 1:00pm---2:15pm LUNCH
 2:15pm---3:15pm PLENARY TALK: 
		 Rodney Brooks:
		 "Learning through social interaction: Robot implementations"
 3:15pm---3:30pm Hans Colonius and Petra Arndt:
		 "Visual-auditory interaction in saccadic eye movements"
 3:30pm---3:45pm John A. Bullinaria, Patricia M. Riddell, and Simon K. Rushton:
		 "Modelling development and adaptation of oculomotor control"
 3:45pm---4:00pm Antonio Guerrero, Juan Lopez, and Jorge Feliu:
		 "Sensory-motor control architecture based on biological
		  models for a stereohead"
 4:00pm---4:15pm Magnus Snorrason and Jeff Norris:
		 "Vision based path planning for Martian terrain"
 4:15pm---4:30pm Philipp Althaus and Paul F.M.J. Verschure:
		 "Distributed adaptive control 5: Bayesian theory of
		  decision making, implemented on simulated and real robots"
 4:30pm---4:45pm Mark A. Kon and Leszek Plaskota:
		 "Information complexity of neural networks"
 4:45pm---5:00pm C.H. Chen and Baoming Hong:
		 "A high efficient face recognition technique based on
		  multi-level feature representations and neural nets"
 5:00pm---5:30pm COFFEE BREAK 
 5:00pm---8:00pm POSTER SESSION I (see below for details)


Friday, May 28, 1999 (Invited and Contributed Talks)
Session Chairs: Gail Carpenter (AM) and Frank Guenther (PM)

 7:30am---8:00am MEETING REGISTRATION
 8:00am---8:45am Shihab Shamma:
		 "Encoding of timbre in the auditory system"
 8:45am---9:30am Nobuo Suga:
		 "Adjustment and improvement of auditory signal 
		  processing by the corticofugal feedback system"
 9:30am--10:15am Stephen Grossberg:
		 "Neural models of auditory and speech perception" 
10:15am--10:45am COFFEE BREAK 
10:45am--11:30am Steven Greenberg:
		 "From sound to meaning: A syllable-centric perspective
		  on spoken language"
11:30am--12:15pm Larry Gillick:
		 "The state of large vocabulary continuous speech recognition"
12:15pm---1:00pm Andreas Andreou:
		 "Neuromorphic VLSI microsystems for speech and 
		  vision processing" 
 1:00pm---2:15pm LUNCH
 2:15pm---2:30pm James R. Williamson:
		 "A hierarchical network for learning vernier discrimination"
 2:30pm---2:45pm Scott Oddo:
		 "ARTMAP: Automated interpretation of Lyme IgG 
		  Western Blots"
 2:45pm---3:00pm Artur Dubrawski and Dorota Daniecka:
		 "Attribute selection for neural training of a breast
		  cancer diagnosis system"
 3:00pm---3:15pm P. Niyogi, M.M. Sondhi, and C. Burges:
		 "A computational framework for distinctive feature 
		  based speech recognition"
 3:15pm---3:30pm Fatima T. Husain and Michiro Negishi:
		 "Model of English vowel classification by Spanish speakers"
 3:30pm---3:45pm Nancy Chang:
		 "Learning form-meaning mappings for language understanding"
 3:45pm---4:00pm L.M. Romanski and P.S. Goldman-Rakic:
		 "An acoustically responsive domain in the prefrontal 
		  cortex of the awake behaving Macaque monkey"
 4:00pm---4:30pm COFFEE BREAK 
 4:30pm---4:45pm R.M. Borisyuk, M.J. Denham, and F.C. Hoppensteadt:
		 "An oscillatory model of novelty detection in the 
		  hippocampus" 
 4:45pm---5:00pm M.J. Denham and R.M. Borisyuk:
		 "An oscillatory model of the septal-hippocampal 
		  inhibitory circuit and the modulation of hippocampal
		  theta activity"
 5:00pm---5:15pm Simona Doboli, Ali A. Minai, and Phillip J. Best:
		 "Context-dependent place representations in the
		  hippocampus"
 5:15pm---5:30pm Jeffrey Krichmar, Theoden Netoff, and James Olds:
		 "Place cells emerge in a network of simulated CA3
		  pyramidal cells that receive robotic sensor input"
 5:30pm---5:45pm Oury Monchi and Michael Petrides:
		 "Investigating various working memory components with a
		  computational model of basal ganglia-thalamocortical loops"
 5:45pm---6:00pm Frank van der Velde and Marc de Kamps:
		 "Locating a familiar object using feedback modulation"
 6:00pm---8:00pm MEETING RECEPTION


Saturday, May 29, 1999 (Invited Talks, Contributed Talks, and Posters)
Session Chairs: Eric Schwartz (AM) and Ennio Mingolla (PM) 

 7:30am---8:00am MEETING REGISTRATION
 8:00am---8:45am Charles Gilbert:
		 "Adult cortical dynamics"
 8:45am---9:30am David van Essen:
		 "Mapping and modeling of cortical structure and function"
 9:30am--10:15am Randolph Blake:
		 "What can be perceived in the absence of visual awareness?"
10:15am--10:45am COFFEE BREAK AND POSTER SESSION II 
10:45am--11:30am Steven Zucker:
		 "Complexity, confusion, and computational vision"
11:30am--12:15pm Ennio Mingolla:
		 "Cortical computation for attentive visual navigation:
		  Heading, time-to-contact, and pursuit movements"
12:15pm---1:00pm Richard Shiffrin:
		 "A model for implicit and explicit memory" 
 1:00pm---2:15pm LUNCH
 2:15pm---3:15pm PLENARY TALK: 
		 Shinsuke Shimojo:
		 "Visual surface filling-in assessed by psychophysics
		  and TMS (Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation)"
 3:15pm---3:30pm S.R. Lehky, T.J. Sejnowski, and R. Desimone:
		 "Sparseness of coding in monkey striate complex cells:
		  Data and modeling" 
 3:30pm---3:45pm R.D.S. Raizada and S. Grossberg:
		 "How do preattentive grouping and attentive modulation 
		  select object representations in the layers of 
		  visual cortex?" 
 3:45pm---4:00pm Nikolaus Almassy, Gerald M. Edelman, and Olaf Sporns:
		 "Function of long-range intracortical connections in 
		  a model of the visual cortex embedded in a behaving 
		  real-world device"
 4:00pm---4:15pm Thorsten Hansen, Karl O. Riedel, Luiz Pessoa, and
		 Heiko Neumann:
		 "Regularization and 2D brightness filling-in:
		  Theoretical analysis and numerical simulations"
 4:15pm---4:30pm Daniel A. Pollen, Andrzej W. Przybyszewski, Warren
		 Foote, and Mark A. Rubin:
		 "Neurons in Macaque V4 respond strongly to stimulus
		  discontinuities"
 4:30pm---4:45pm DeLiang L. Wang:
		 "Object-based selection by a neural oscillator network"
 4:45pm---5:00pm Nilendu Gautambhai Jani and Daniel S. Levine:
		 "A neural network theory of proportional analogy-making"
 5:00pm---5:30pm COFFEE BREAK 
 5:00pm---8:00pm POSTER SESSION II (see below for details)


POSTER SESSION I: Thursday, May 27, 1999
All posters will be displayed for the full day.

Cognition, Learning, Recognition (B):
 Brigitte Nevers and Remy Versace:
	"Contributions of studies about the frequency effects in the
	 processes of activation and integration of memory traces"
 Gary C.-W. Shyi and Chang-Ming Lin:
	"Computing representations for object recognition in visual
	 search: An eye-movement analysis"
 Emmet Spier:
	"Cognition not needed: An associative model for the outcome
	 devaluation effect" 
 William Power, Ray Frank, Neil Davey, and John Done:
	"A modular attractor model of semantic access"
 Sylvain Hanneton, Olivier Gapenne, Christelle Genouel, Charles Lenay, 
 and Catherine Marque:
	"Dynamics of shape recognition through a minimal visuo-tactile
	 sensory substitution interface"
 Cristiane Salum, Antonio Roque da Silva, and Alan Pickering:
	"Possible role of dopamine in learning and attention: 
	 A computational approach"
 C.-S.R. Li, Y.-Y. Yang, and H.-C. Chen:
	"Sensory and spatial components of tactile extinction and 
	 allesthesia in cortical and thalamic lesions"
 Robert Homer and Bogdan Sasaran:
	"The role of monoamine neurotransmitters in brain development 
	 and mental illness: A neural network model"
 G.J. Dalenoort and P.H. de Vries:
	"Cognitive control and binding"
 Stephen Grossberg and Dmitry V. Repin:
	"How does the brain represent numbers?"
 Julian Paul Keenan, John Ives, Qun Chen, Gottfried Schlaug,
 Thomas Kauffman, David Bartres-Faz, and Alvaro Pascual-Leone:
	"Mapping cortical networks via functional magnetic resonance
	 imaging and transcranial magnetic stimulation: 
	 Preliminary results"
 Julian Paul Keenan, John Ives, Qun Chen, Gottfried Schlaug,
 Thomas Kauffman, David Bartres-Faz, and Alvaro Pascual-Leone:
	"Modulating cortical excitability using repetitive transcranial
	 magnetic stimulation in a self-face study to examine the role
	 of inhibition in the prefrontal cortex"


Adaptive Resonance Theory (B + T):
 Norbert Kopco, Peter Sincak, and Rudolf Jaksa:
	"Methods for analysis and enhancement of neural network 
	 classification of remotely sensed images"
 Gail A. Carpenter and Matthew W. Giamporcaro:
	"A computer game testbed for modeling strategic decision making"
 Gail A. Carpenter, Sucharita Gopal, Scott Macomber, Byron Shock,
 and Curtis E. Woodcock:
	"ARTMAP neural network classification of land use change"
 Marc-Andre Cantin, Eric Granger, and Yvon Savaria:
	"Four implementations of the fuzzy Adaptive Resonance Theory
	 (ART) neural network for high data throughput applications"
 Luis Marti, Luciano Garcia, and Miguel Catasus:
	"Continuous-valued function approximation by an ART-based
	 neural network"
 Mark A. Rubin and Aijaz Baloch:
	"Demonstration of an ARTEX implementation for recognition 
	 of visual textures"
 Quanhong Wang:
	"Tests of two theoretical explanations for the perceptual 
	 interference effect: Adaptive Resonance Theory versus 
	 competitive activation models"


Neural and Hybrid Systems (B + T):
 Hiroki Aoki and Toshimichi Saito:
	"A SOM with virtual connection and its application to guess 
	 of membership functions"
 Hiroyuki Torikai and Toshimichi Saito:
	"Basic functions from an integrate-and-fire circuit with 
	 plural inputs"
 Brian M. O'Rourke:
	"Tactics for time series modeling with neural networks and
	 fuzzy clustering"
 Mark Plutowski:	
	"Emotional processing: A framework for handling multiple
	 motivations in autonomous software agents"
 David V. Reynolds:
	"Computer simulation of large-scale neural systems of pain
	 and aggression based on fuzzy logic"
 Rajat K. De:
	"Artificial consciousness: Integration of knowledge-based and
	 case-based approach in a neuro-fuzzy paradigm"
 G.E. Campbell, W.L. Buff, and D.W. Dorsey:
	"Decision making in a tactical setting: Crisp or fuzzy reasoning?"
 Raj P. Malhotra and Yan M. Yufik:
	"Virtual associative networks for complexity reduction in
	 information fusion"


Audition, Speech, and Language (B + T):
 M.G. Srikanthan and R.J. Glover:
	"Wavelet neural network based echolocation"
 Barbara Shinn-Cunningham, Norbert Kopco, and Scott Santarelli:
	"Computation of acoustic source position in near-field listening"
 Lewis Meier:
	"Application of computerized auditory scene analysis to 
	 underwater acoustic signals"
 Ivelin Stoianov:
	"Recurrent autoassociative networks and sequential processing"
 Susan L. Denham:
	"Synaptic depression may explain many of the temporal response
	 properties observed in primary auditory cortex: 
	 A computational investigation"
 Katja Wiemer-Hastings, Arthur C. Graesser, and Peter Wiemer-Hastings:
	"Exploring effective linguistic context with feedforward 
	 neural networks"


VLSI:
 Sorin Draghici and Thierry de Pauw:
	"On the computational power of limited precision weights neural
	 networks in classification problems: How to calculate the 
	 weight range so that a solution will exist"
 Catherine Breslin:
	"Neuromorphic design by physical equivalence: Simple animal
	 and neuron models"
 Luca Marchese:
	"Neuromorphic VLSI servers"
 Todd Hinck, Howard Cohen, Gert Cauwenberghs, Allyn Hubbard,
 and Andreas Andreou:
	"Neuromorphic VLSI systems for boundary contour integration:
	An interactive demonstration"
 Gu Lin and Bingxue Shi:
	"A programmable and expandable Hamming network integrated circuit" 


Neural System Models (B + T):
 Shinji Karasawa:
	"Impulse recurrent loops for short-term memory which merges
	 with experience and long-term memory"
 F.E. Lauria, R. Prevete, M. Milo, and S. Visco:
	"The Java package it.na.cy.nnet"
 Dorian Aur and Teodora Ghioca:
	"Neural network formation for cooperative bifurcation neurons"
 Lumei Hui:
	"Comparison between the two-dot method and the transparency
	 method for the autostereogram perception"
 Lydia N. Derkach:
	"Cognitive neuropsychology: A synthesis of western and 
	 eastern research"
 J. Marro and J.J. Torres:
	"Neural networks with coherent fluctuations of synapses"
 Nils Hulth:
	"Feature vector representations and individual scaling of
	 prototype vectors"



POSTER SESSION II: Saturday, May 29, 1999
All posters will be displayed for the full day.

Vision (B):
 Drazen Domijan:
	"Boundary computation, presynaptic inhibition, and 
	 lightness perception"
 Harald Ruda and Magnus Snorrason:
	"Modeling time to detection for observers searching for
	 targets in cluttered backgrounds"
 Li-Yun Fu:
	"A neuron filtering model for space- and time-varying 
	 signal processing"
 Sachin Ahuja and Bart Farell:
	"Points, lines, and surfaces"
 J.M. Harris and S.K. Rushton:
	"An eccentric hemisphere explanation of visual search 
	 for motion in depth?" 
 Vinoth Jagaroo:
	"A neuropsychological perspective of spatial reference frames:
	 Implications for the modeling of high-level vision"
 Jens Mansson:
	"Contour enhancement by local iso-orientation-cooperation and
	 texture suppression"
 Thorsten Hansen and Heiko Neumann:
	"Contrast processing and contour enhancement: A model of 
	 recurrent long-range interactions in V1"
 Wolfgang Sepp and Heiko Neumann:
	"A hierarchical filling-in model for real-time brightness
	 reconstruction"
 Lynette Linden:
	"Understanding image colors in phase space"
 Raymond K. Chafin and Cihan H. Dagli:
	"Biologically inspired connectionist models for image feature
	 extraction in machine vision systems"
 Mark Wexler, Francesco Panerai, and Jacques Droulez:
	"Looking actively at Ames's window"
 Lavanya Viswanathan, Stephen Grossberg, and Ennio Mingolla:
	"Neural dynamics of motion grouping across apertures"


Sensory-Motor Control (B):
 Brad Rhodes and Daniel Bullock:
	"A neural model for sequence learning and production"
 Sally Bogacz and Willard Larkin:
	"Motor control in fast musical passages"
 Thomas J. Anastasio, Paul E. Patton, and Kamel Belkacem-Boussaid:
	"Modeling multisensory enhancement in the superior colliculus
	 using Bayes' rule"
 J.E. Vos and J.J. van Heijst:
	"A model of sensorimotor development using a neural network"
 Greg T. Gdowski and Robert A. McCrea:
	"Sensory signals carried by vestibulo-spinal and other 
	 non-eye-movement related vestibular neurons during voluntary
	 head movements"
 Greg T. Gdowski and Robert A. McCrea:
	"Sensory signals carried by the vestibular nuclei during 
	 reflexive head movements evoked by whole body rotation" 
 Jan G. Smits:
	"Dependence of time constant for stroke recovery of 
	 complexity of tasks"
 M. Chen, C.-S.R. Li, Y.-Y. Yang, C.-Y. Liu, H.-L. Chang,
 C. Shen, Y.-M. Chuang, and L.-Y. Kao:
	"Perceptual alternation in obsessive compulsive disorder:
	 Implications for the functions of the frontostriatal circuitry"


Sensory-Motor Control (T) and Robotics (T):
 John R. Alexander Jr.:
	"Timing problems of neural control circuits"
 F. Panerai, G. Metta, and G. Sandini:
	"An artificial vestibular system for reflex-control of robot
	 eye movements"
 Michail G. Lagoudakis and Anthony S. Maida:
	"A polar neural map for mobile robot navigation"
 G. Baratoff, C. Toepfer, and H. Neumann:
	"Combining space-variant maps for flow-based obstacle detection
	 and body-scaled free-space navigation"
 Angelo Arleo and Wulfram Gerstner:
	"Spatial models and autonomous navigation in neuro-mimetic systems"
 Giorgio Metta, Giulio Sandini, Riccardo Manzotti, and Francesco Panerai:
	"Learning eye-head-hand coordination: A developmental approach"
 S. Srinivasan and A. Bradley:
	"Sequential task execution in a prosthetic limb using an 
	 artificial neural network"


Neural and Hybrid Systems (B + T):
 Raymond Pavlovski and Majid Karimi:
	"Control of basins of attraction in a self-trapping neural 
	 network with near-neighbor synapses"
 Anatoli Gorchetchnikov:
	"The level of suppression in feedback connections required for
	 learning depends primarily on intracellular parameters"
 David Vogel:
	"A partial model of cortical memory"
 Chun-Kam Horng and Chin-Ming Hong:
	"Learning efficiency improvement of CMAC neural network by
	 Gaussian basis function"
 Ana Madevska and Dragan Nikolic:
	"Automatic classification with support vector machines in
	 molecular biology"
 Alex Heneveld:
	"A plausible neural network architecture: Temporal Hebbian
	 inhibit-undesireds"
 M. Mar Abad Grau and Luis Daniel Hernandez Molinero:
	"Context-specific neural network feature selector with 
	 missing data"
 Per Jesper Sjostrom and Lars Ulrik Wahlberg:
	"Automated cell recognition and counting based on a 
	 combination of artificial neural networks and standard
	 image analysis methods"
 Rafal Bogacz and Marcin Chady:
	"Local connections in a neural network improve pattern completion"
 Andrea Corradini:
	"Automatic posture recognition in color images using 
	 hybrid neural networks"


Neural System Models (B + T):
 Wei Cao, SongNian Yu, and William Gregory:
	"New approach for measuring complexity of linear-inseparable
	 multidimensional data patterns"
 Zhe Chen:
	"The application of wavelet neural network for time series
	 prediction and system modeling based on multiresolution learning"
 Maria Alvarez Florendo and Anthony Roland Florendo:
	"Solutions to the binary addition, parity and symmetry problems
	 using feedforward networks with inhibitory lateral connections"
 J.R.C. Piqueira, F.M. Formagin, L.H.A. Monteiro, and J.S. Del Nero:
	"Full connected phase locked loops as a model for synchronizing 
	 neuron sets"
 Steven Lehar:
	"The Gestalt principle of isomorphism and the perceptual 
	 representation of space"
 Gu Lin and Bingxue Shi:
	"A programmable and expandable fuzzy recognition integrated circuit"
 Boris Galitsky:
	"How the logic of mental attributes models the autism" 

********************
---
This was an announcement from the Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems at
Boston University.  If you would like to be removed from this mailing list and
discontinue receiving these announcements, you may send an e-mail to
"majordomo@cns.bu.edu" with the following line in the body of the message:

unsubscribe announcements

If you have any trouble in doing so, please do not hesitate to report
problems to "owner-majordomo@cns.bu.edu".
Thank you.


From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Wed Mar 17 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!bcm.tmc.edu!news.msfc.nasa.gov!newsfeed.cwix.com!198.138.0.5!newshub.northeast.verio.net!woodstock.news.demon.net!demon!news.demon.co.uk!demon!deadline-comms.demon.co.uk!none444.yet
From: no.email.address.entered@none444.yet
Newsgroups: bionet.population-bio
Subject: URGENT! WINTESLA NEEDED SOFTWARE FOR NOKIA MOBILE PHONES URGENT!
Date: Thursday, 18 Mar 1999 20:26:52 -0600
Organization: <no organization>
Message-ID: <18039920.2652@none444.yet>
Reply-To: wintesla@deadline-comms.demon.co.uk
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Hi I'm looking for wintesla the software needed to change the firmware 
if you have seen such software please post it to this address or a URL
for it

wintesla@deadline-comms.demon.co.uk

Thanx Wayne


From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Thu Mar 18 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!news.stanford.edu!newsfeed.berkeley.edu!news-xfer.newsread.com!netaxs.com!newsread.com!panix!news.panix.com!lokijuhyg
From: lokijuhyg@nhyxe.jyhdcsx.mil.edu.no (kimunybtv)
Newsgroups: nyc.general,bionet.ecology,bionet.population-bio
Subject: where black squirrels live in NYC
Date: Thu, 18 Mar 1999 23:03:06 -0400
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In New York City, most wild squirrels are medium gray but a minority are
black.  Most NYC places with squirrels have the gray ones but seem to have
few or no black ones.  On the lower East side of Manhattan, there are two,
adjacent, privately owned, housing projects:  Peter Cooper Village and
Stuyvesant Town.  There is a high percentage of black squirrels on the
grounds of those two, adjacent projects.

Why is it that there is only one squirrel neighborhood in NYC with a high
percentage of black squirrels?  Coincidence?

From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Thu Mar 18 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!news.stanford.edu!newsfeed.berkeley.edu!newsfeed.nyu.edu!newsmaster.cc.columbia.edu!not-for-mail
From: adr5@columbia.edu (Alex Rodriguez)
Newsgroups: nyc.general,bionet.ecology,bionet.population-bio
Subject: Re: where black squirrels live in NYC
Date: 19 Mar 1999 22:24:08 GMT
Organization: Your Organization
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In article <lokijuhyg-1803992303070001@zz.dialup.access.net>, 
lokijuhyg@nhyxe.jyhdcsx.mil.edu.no says...
>
>
>In New York City, most wild squirrels are medium gray but a minority are
>black.  Most NYC places with squirrels have the gray ones but seem to have
>few or no black ones.  On the lower East side of Manhattan, there are two,
>adjacent, privately owned, housing projects:  Peter Cooper Village and
>Stuyvesant Town.  There is a high percentage of black squirrels on the
>grounds of those two, adjacent projects.
>
>Why is it that there is only one squirrel neighborhood in NYC with a high
>percentage of black squirrels?  Coincidence?

When I was going to school at BX. Comm. Coll. I noticed that the mix on 
campus was about 50/50 .  I think you just have to get around the city 
more.   
-- 
-----------------  
Alex     __O 
       _-\<,_
      (_)/ (_) 
 


From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Thu Mar 18 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!rutgers!rockyd.rockefeller.edu!newsfeed.nyu.edu!newshub.northeast.verio.net!newspeer.monmouth.com!cyclone.rr.com!newse1.tampabay.rr.com!newse2.tampabay.rr.com.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: jag@tampabay.rr.com
Newsgroups: bionet.population-bio
Subject: Stop ... Premature Ejaculation!!  468
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <YRyI2.710$rE6.238@newse2.tampabay.rr.com>
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 1999 20:56:24 GMT
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NNTP-Posting-Date: Fri, 19 Mar 1999 15:56:24 EDT
Organization: RoadRunner - TampaBay

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From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Thu Mar 18 22:00:00 1999
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From: voulezvous@oohlala.com (Norm dePlume)
Newsgroups: nyc.general,bionet.ecology,bionet.population-bio
Subject: Re: where black squirrels live in NYC
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 1999 10:10:37 -0500
Organization: MindSpring Enterprises
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When I lived in Inwood (in Northern Manhattan, 218th and Park Terrace
West) there were plenty of black squirrels, but for some reason only the
gray ones used to jump in my kitchen window and steal food.


In article <lokijuhyg-1803992303070001@zz.dialup.access.net>,
lokijuhyg@nhyxe.jyhdcsx.mil.edu.no (kimunybtv) wrote:

> In New York City, most wild squirrels are medium gray but a minority are
> black.  Most NYC places with squirrels have the gray ones but seem to have
> few or no black ones.  On the lower East side of Manhattan, there are two,
> adjacent, privately owned, housing projects:  Peter Cooper Village and
> Stuyvesant Town.  There is a high percentage of black squirrels on the
> grounds of those two, adjacent projects.
> 
> Why is it that there is only one squirrel neighborhood in NYC with a high
> percentage of black squirrels?  Coincidence?

From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Mon Mar 22 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!news.stanford.edu!newsfeed.stanford.edu!news-feed.inet.tele.dk!bofh.vszbr.cz!news.dknet.dk!not-for-mail
From: ----Remove-to-reply----Agner@login.dknet.dk (Agner Fog)
Newsgroups: bionet.population-bio,sci.bio.ethology
Subject: Book announcement: Cultural Selection
Date: Tue, 23 Mar 1999 17:14:34 +0100
Organization: Customer at Tele Danmark Internet
Lines: 33
Message-ID: <q3792sT5dUfG092yn@login.dknet.dk>
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Just published:
Agner Fog: Cultural Selection
Dordrecht: Kluwer 1999.

Interdisciplinary treatise giving a comprehensive overview of cultural 
selection theory - a theory of social change based in part on evolutionary
thinking.  

Challenges traditional sociology by its superior ability to explain the 
irrational, unplanned, or unwanted aspects of a culture.

Cultural selection theory is broader than memetics, because it includes 
selection processes that can not be expressed in terms of information units.

Demonstrates a causal connection between the peacefulness or bellicosity of a 
society and its cultural expressions: political ideals, discipline, philosophy, 
morals, art, and music.  

The book examines examples from many different aspects of culture, including:
- the history and evolution of religions
- political history
- economic competition
- the spread of myths, stories, beliefs, jokes, etc.
- witchhunts and moral panics
- the role of mass media in social change
- sexual behavior and the development of sexual morals
- art, music, dance, clothing
- play, games, sport
- political consequences of the theory


Excerpts from the book can be seen at www.agner.org/cultsel


From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Mon Mar 22 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!ffpri-hkd.affrc.go.jp!isono
From: isono@ffpri-hkd.affrc.go.jp (Masahiro Isono)
Newsgroups: bionet.population-bio
Subject: subscribe
Date: 22 Mar 1999 16:53:26 -0800
Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Molecular Biology
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------------------------------------
$B0kLn>;90!!(BMasahiro ISONO
$B?9NSAm9g8&5f=j!&KL3$F;;Y=j!&:+Cn8&5f<<(B
e-mail:isono@ffpri-hkd.affrc.go.jp
------------------------------------

From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Wed Mar 24 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!newshost.lanl.gov!awabi.library.ucla.edu!142.231.112.2!cyclone.bc.net!news.maxwell.syr.edu!woodstock.news.demon.net!demon!news.demon.co.uk!demon!irchouse.demon.co.uk!Richard
From: Richard Seaby <Richard@irchouse.demon.co.uk>
Newsgroups: bionet.population-bio
Subject: ANNOUNCE: Species Diversity and Richness II
Date: Thu, 25 Mar 1999 12:30:11 +0000
Organization: PISCES Conservation Ltd
Message-ID: <raPRPgATxi+2EwUP@irchouse.demon.co.uk>
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Species Diversity and Richness II is a program to aid ecologists and 
environmentalists in the calculation and application of diversity 
indices and estimating total species richness for a habitat. 
The program is available for Windows 95/98.

The new release includes
        further diversity measures;
        beta diversity; 
        more diversity ordering methods; 
        data simulation from a variety of models
        distribution fitting (Geometric, log series, truncated log
normal and broken stick)
        between-sample comparisons of diversity using randomization
tests
        boot strapping of individual samples to give 95% error terms

Price 60 UK pounds Sterling  (+ VAT in EU Only)

Postage and packing - within EU 2 UK pounds Sterling, 
                      rest of world 5 UK pounds Sterling.

For more information visit our web site at
http://www.irchouse.demon.co.uk
Dr Richard Seaby
PISCES Conservation Ltd     
IRC House
The Square
Pennington          Tel     - 44 (0)1590 676622
Lymington           Fax     - 44 (0)1590 675599
Hants               Email   - pisces@irchouse.demon.co.uk
SO41 8GN            Website - Http://www.irchouse.demon.co.uk


From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Fri Mar 26 22:00:00 1999
From: dildoman@pussysuck.com
Newsgroups: bionet.population-bio
Subject: NEW AMATEUR SITE!!!!  2773   [13/2]
Lines: 137
Message-ID: <597L2.12081$R92.7202@news20.bellglobal.com>
Date: Sat, 27 Mar 1999 15:52:33 GMT
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Path: biosci!news.ic.sunysb.edu!news-nysernet-16.sprintlink.net!news-east1.sprintlink.net!news-peer1.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!feeder.qis.net!sunqbc.risq.qc.ca!torn!news1.bellglobal.com!news20.bellglobal.com.POSTED!not-for-mail

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From owner-population-bio@net.bio.net Fri Mar 26 22:00:00 1999
Path: biosci!daresbury!uninett.no!news.maxwell.syr.edu!sunqbc.risq.qc.ca!torn!news1.bellglobal.com!news20.bellglobal.com.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: dildoman@pussysuck.com
Newsgroups: bionet.population-bio
Subject: NEW AMATEUR SITE!!!!  2773   [1/2]
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <497L2.12080$R92.7202@news20.bellglobal.com>
Date: Sat, 27 Mar 1999 15:52:32 GMT
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Organization: Bell Solutions

It is all at:
-------------------------------------------------------
http://www.spacecat.com/exxhibit
-------------------------------------------------------

ojyxpdfxtqerwddwiwxmmqcsciweppziudghtvqswooyitjpttzdzvhumcybiyftfqnzddqcpwypbtuz


